The bull’s-eye figures to be as unmistakable as the smog hanging over Los Angeles on a bad air day.

Lonzo Ball simply doesn’t care. Oh, he knows he will be a marked man when he sets foot in the NBA, presumably in a Lakers uniform, but he cannot worry about it.

“There’s probably a target on me, but I don’t really care about it,” Ball, the presumptive No. 2 overall pick — which happens to belong to the Lakers — said Wednesday in Midtown at a gathering of the top prospects before Thursday’s NBA draft at Barclays Center.

That target grows larger and more pronounced every time Ball’s father, LaVar, says something that is as correct as belching before addressing the pope. LaVar, for example, once proclaimed his son better than Stephen Curry. Figure Draymond Green might take umbrage at that.

“I assume I will [have a target],” said UCLA’s Ball, whose undeniable court talent overshadows family matters. “It brings out the competitor in you. You’ve got to go out there and play every night. I’ve been playing like that for a long time so I’m pretty used to it.”

Ball only worked out for the Lakers, and they didn’t seem to care in the least about LaVar, who has pushed the hometown team to draft his son seemingly since the Lakers were in Minneapolis.

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“They were just open arms,” said Ball, who admitted he has only been to two NBA games in his life — both Clippers home games, one against the Lakers. “He [LaVar] was always just full of energy, loud and I love him.”

What about folks who place his father alongside people claiming to be Napoleon?

“I just brush it off,” Ball said. “Like I said, everybody has something to say. I can’t help it, so I just go out and play my game.”

His game has brought superlatives from all corners. OK, the jump shot is as attractive as sludge. But it works.

“Ball is just tremendous in terms of changing a team,” one NBA scout said. “His passing is unbelievable. He shoots it in a weird way, but it goes in, so it’s effective. But his passing is unreal.”

So much so that he has been compared to Jason Kidd, whose court vision and passing is the stuff of legend.

“Never met him, definitely watched a lot of tape on him, seen a lot of his games, and to get compared to him, it’s pretty good,” said Ball, describing Kidd as a “triple-double threat every night, great teammate, just loves to win.”

Ball is considered the second pick behind Washington’s Markelle Fultz in a draft with a horde of potential point-guard studs.

Another is De’Aaron Fox of Kentucky, who admitted he gets asked about his rivalry with Ball probably as much as Ball gets asked about his father.

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“We get a little tired of it, but it’s fine. We’re both point guards. We’re going to play against each other in the NBA. Off the court, we don’t talk about basketball,” Fox said. “We’re friends. … We talk about other stuff, what we’re doing in life, things like that. We were friends before we even played at UCLA and Kentucky.”

Said Ball: “We’re pretty good friends. Obviously he’s a competitor, I’m a competitor. He wants to be the best, I want to be the best, so I’ll leave it at that.”

Now Ball finally will get what he has awaited his whole life: hearing his name called at the NBA draft. He said wherever he ends up was meant to be, but if it is not the Lakers, figure a family member will have a comment or two. Ball, the 6-foot-6 national assist leader as a freshman, only wants to bring his skills that he feels are topped by “court vision” to a league ripe for his style.

“The NBA has definitely transitioned into a fast-paced game,” he said. “Everybody is getting pushed out of position. Power forwards are centers now, 3-men are power forwards. It complements my game very well.”